Section V Past, Current and Projected Water Use Current Water Demand Since 2000, new connections to the water system have been added at an annual rate of 4.9% with an overall increase in water demand of 5.2 % per year. The City has continued

forecast and actual ActewAGL capital expenditure, 2000–04 $ million, real 2004–05 ... 6) Source: MMA Review of demandforecasts, cost allocation, and expenditure, p. 106. ... depreciation on the actual level of capital expenditure, rather than using the depreciation forecast made in 2000 • used the most recent forecast of capital expenditure for 2004

Figure 4-16: Total Annual Natural Gas DemandForecast for Lower Mainland Customers TJ 25000 New CustomerDemand Existing CustomerDemand ... Figure 4-16 shows the resulting Lower Mainland Residential demand for all customers and for all end uses. While this graph shows how the above end-use analysis ... about where the Utilities might best focus their activities toward each of these customer

It is important to note that this water demandforecast does not account for future water purchases or withdrawals used for injection into the District’s aquifer storage and recovery (ASR) wells. Total annual water requirements by the system ... Average Day Demand (ADD) Plateau Zone Single-Family Residential (1) City ... City of Issaquah King County Subtotal Subtotal - Plateau Retail Demand (4) Other Water Demand (5) Distribution System Leakage (6) Subtotal - Plateau Zone ADD

customer totals, annual deliveries, and the forecastannual design peak day demand ... Graph 1 below represents the cumulative annual peak day demandforecast of all ... on the graph. For simplicity of reporting and forecasting, customers are usually grouped

4-2 Projected Water Demands for Each Customer Class in Thousands of Acre-/ft Average Annual ... The total projected water demands are shown in Figure 4-2. ... A summary of the water projections for each customer class is presented in Table 4-2. It is expected that the actual water usage between 2000 and 2020 should fall within plus or minus six percent of these projections (DWP, 2000).

generation must FIGURE 5. CHANGE IN DEMAND COMPOSITION, 1999 ACTUAL 2007 ACTUAL ... gas consumption continues to grow, the nature of that consumption has changed TRENDS IN DEMAND ... energy prices and climate change concerns have not only slowed the rate of demand

Exhibit III.1-1 shows the actual and forecastannual operations by user group ... commuter service, are forecast to grow from 7, 500 annual operations in 2006 to 13 ... are forecast to remain constant at 44, 100 operations from 2006 to 2025. In total, annual